Gulf Today

Nepal holds first parliament­ary elections since 1990

Second phase of the polls will take place on Dec.7, says election commission

-

KATHMANDU: Nepalis began voting for a new parliament on Sunday with the army on alert on Sunday as a series of small blasts blamed on a rogue Maoist group reminded the Himalayan nation of the violence and instabilit­y it is hoping to leave behind.

More than a decade after the end of a civil war between Maoist peasant guerrillas and security forces, Nepal is hoping this election — the irst parliament­ary polls since 1999 — will complete its long journey from a monarchy to become a federal republic.

A second phase of the election will take place on Dec.7, and the election commission has said that the inal results probably won’t be known for several days because of the cumbersome counting procedures.

A Maoist splinter group was behind a series of small blasts in the run up to the polls, army spokesman Nain Raj Dahal said, adding that security forces have defused around 30 improvised explosive devices since Friday.

For all the security concerns, voting was largely incident-free.

“Except for some minor complaints from a few places, polling in all areas is smooth and peaceful so far,” Ila Sharma, a member of the Election Commission told Reuters.

Suresh Balsami was the irst voter at Kagatigaun polling centre, about an hour’s drive mostly on a dusty and winding road from capital Kathmandu.

“I voted for peace, developmen­t and prosperity of the country,” said the 32-year-old bus driver, as other voters began to trickle into the polling centre in a public school ringed by pine trees.

Candidates have used everything from mules to drones lying their party lags to reach voters in remote areas with no roads, according to media reports.

Nepal voted in 2008 and 2013 for a Constituen­t Assembly, which doubled as parliament, to write a post-monarchy charter that plotted the course to becoming a federal republic.

More than 15 million eligible voters will pick a 275-member legislatur­e, the irst under a new constituti­on agreed after years of wrangling.

Simultaneo­usly, voters will choose representa­tives to seven provincial assemblies for the irst time since Nepal abolished the monarchy in 2008.

The centrist Nepali Congress party, considered a pro-india group, has formed a loose electoral alliance with the Madhesi parties from the country’s southern plains bordering India and former royalists.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? A woman casts her vote at a polling station in a district of Kathmandu on Sunday.
Agence France-presse A woman casts her vote at a polling station in a district of Kathmandu on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain